
Your thoughts create your perceptions/perspectives, which then manifest themselves into your reality.
For example, people who view earth's transition as something they "have to get through" are simply adding anxiety to their lives, which is a negative. They perceive it as being something they must "get through" rather than something they are living IN. Be in the NOW, the journey is the thing. Whatever happens is supposed to happen. How you RESPOND to it determines how it will affect your life. In other words, it's all a matter of perspective.Realize that NOTHING has meaning, everything is neutral, it simply exists. Nothing has built-in meaning. YOU assign something meaning by virtue of what you've been taught. The meaning you ascribe to something determines what you get out of any given situation. Therefore, if you want any given situation to be beneficial to you, then adjust your perspective to make that situation one from which you can only benefit from - no matter what anyone else may be experiencing in the same situation.
Once I learned to put things in their proper (and positive) perspective and my perception of them, I became calm, peaceful. I no longer worried about every little thing because I knew I could change my perception of those 'every little things' from mountains to molehills. I no longer felt victimized and quit playing into the cabal game of keeping humanity in a perpetual state of 'feeling helpless' victimhood - myself included.
And when we allow our perceptions to get away from us, what happens next? STRESS.
What does stress do to the body?
How often do we rely on our own perceptions as being correct only to discover they weren't correct at all and just an illusion? More often than we'd like to admit to ourselves.

Try this one...

See how easy it is for our perceptions to fool us?
Puttimh things in their proper perspective when faced with any kind of hardship or adversity makes all the difference in the world when it comes to having a positive or negative outcome.
I discovered this myself during my first round of Necrotizing Fasciitis or Flesh Eating Disease. WARNING: GRAPHIC PHOTO AHEAD!
A cyst in my thigh ruptured and luckily, my doctor could see me right away. She phoned the ER in the hospital south of me and told them I was on my way and what she'd diagnosed. By the time I got to the hospital not even 2 hours later, I was so septic I was literally on the verge of death and don't remember anything past walking into the ER.

Surgeons removed a major portion of my thigh. The wound you see at left is HALF the wound. I had over 13 surgeries to remove dead flesh and was left with a wound that was 30" long x 3" wide x 2-1/2" deep.
If you've ever had Necrotizing Fasciitis then you know how excruciatingly painful it is. Far worse than childbirth.
In addition, changing the dressing 3 times per day left me screaming in pain and in tears. Until the nurses got the surgeon to do a dressing change on me so he could see for himself how godawful it was for me. He then ordered me to the OR for subsequent dressing changes under general anesthesia.
I was in a coma for 3 days in ICU and hospitalized for a month with a wound vac. Yet I made my perspective one of "Yes, it hurts like hell but don't be a pain in the ass about it. Stay your usual cheerful self" - which is precisely what I did, constantly joking with the nurses and OR teams. My surgeons couldn't believe how fast I healed, releasing me much earlier than they expected to. Not only that, hospital personnel asked me to come back and talk with critically ill patients on how to stay upbeat when dealing with their own life threatening illnesses.

Because I'd stayed in the proper perspective, when I got hit with a second round of Necrotizing Fasciitis the following spring, I breezed right through it. This despite 3 of the doctors failing to communicate with each other when prescribing drugs for me, that created the perfect storm in my body and sent my potassium level soaring to 7.8. Emergency surgery was delayed while nephrology inserted a dialysis stent in my neck the size of a garden hose and performed emergency dyalisis to remove all the potassium out of my system. I actually had the head of nephrology coming to see me for himself, telling me "I've seen someone with an 8 potassium level before - but he was dead. When I heard we had a 7.8 that was not only fully lucid but ambulatory, I had to come see you for myself." My surgeon later told me there was a 4 hour window where they didn't know if I'd survive or not and I have Stage 3 renal failure as a result. But it was because I kept things in their proper perspective that I once again not only survived but healed much faster than anyone expected I would. I'm convinced had I not kept things in their proper perspective I'd be pushing up daisies right now and looking at the wrong side of dirt.
I discovered a neat trick to changing negative perceptions to positive ones. I got a journal and any time I was hit with a negative situation, I made a list of all of the positives that could come from that negative experience, as well as all of the positives I had to be thankful for in my life.
By doing this, I trained my mind to automatically go to the positive vs. the negative and change my perceptions accordingly. I discovered less and less negative situations cropping up in my life as a result.
Don't ask yourself "Why is this happening to me?" Rather, ask "What can I learn from this situation?" Learn that lesson, put the negative situation behind you and move forward.
An added bonus: As you do this you will find yourself developing more and more inner strength. While we may not like adversity, it is one of the most effective teachers we have.
Perception is key in regaining your sovereignty and escaping the Matrix.
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